Time scales of ecosystem impacts and recovery under individual and serial invasions
Introductions of keystone or engineering species have complex and long-term impacts on multiple ecosystem features. Anticipating these consequences requires knowledge of the magnitude and pace of a species’ impacts and whether they subside as resident species and communities adapt. Managing for the...
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Zusammenfassung: | Introductions of keystone or engineering species have complex and
long-term impacts on multiple ecosystem features. Anticipating these
consequences requires knowledge of the magnitude and pace of a species’
impacts and whether they subside as resident species and communities
adapt. Managing for the effects of invasive species is particularly
complicated by a paucity of long-term ecosystem studies, the fact that
invaders can represent novel ecological types, and as serial invasions by
new species mediate the impacts of an original invader. We resolve the
impacts of quagga (Dreissena rostriformis bugensis) and zebra mussels (D.
polymorpha), two of the most widespread species that increasingly
co-invade and re-engineer energy flows in freshwater ecosystems. Following
many-decade time series and seven ecosystem features, we find remarkably
similar ecosystem responses to mussel invasion across seven lakes in
Europe and North America. Lakes invaded by zebra mussels only experienced
the most severe changes within 5-10 years of invasion, followed by a
partial recovery of several key ecosystem features. However, recovery
disappeared, and initial impacts amplified in lakes where subsequent,
serial invasions by quagga mussels competitively displaced zebra mussels.
Our results suggest that the impact of quagga is stronger per unit biomass
due to their greater effects on phytoplankton during spring and fall.
Thus, we show that the effects of species introductions on many lake
ecosystem features can manifest quickly and partially subside, except when
multiple species invade a system. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.mpg4f4qzw |